- 19 Aug, 2003 8 commits
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Sean Estabrooks <seanlkml@rogers.com> - fix space at end of line in config files; - add error check on put_user(); (Daniele Bellucci <bellucda@tiscali.it>) - add missing Kconfig piece for ikconfig;
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Oliver Xymoron <oxymoron@waste.org> Currently, a writepage() which detects that it is writing outside i_size (due to concurrent truncate) will abandon the write, returning -EIO. The return value will bogusly cause an error to be recorded in the address_space. So convert all those writepage() instances to return zero in this case.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Oliver Xymoron <oxymoron@waste.org> This patch just saves a few bytes in the inode by turning mapping->gfp_mask into an unsigned long mapping->flags. The mapping's gfp mask is placed in the 16 high bits of mapping->flags and two of the remaining 16 bits are used for tracking EIO and ENOSPC errors. This leaves 14 bits in the mapping for future use. They should be accessed with the atomic bitops.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Oliver Xymoron <oxymoron@waste.org> These patches add the infrastructure for reporting asynchronous write errors to block devices to userspace. Error which are detected due to pdflush or VM writeout are reported at the next fsync, fdatasync, or msync on the given file, and on close if the error occurs in time. We do this by propagating any errors into page->mapping->error when they are detected. In fsync(), msync(), fdatasync() and close() we return that error and zero it out. The Open Group say close() _may_ fail if an I/O error occurred while reading from or writing to the file system. Well, in this implementation close() can return -EIO or -ENOSPC. And in that case it will succeed, not fail - perhaps that is what they meant. There are three patches in this series and testing has only been performed with all three applied.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: mikep@csd.uu.se There has been a number of problem reports about local APIC interacting badly with ACPI on P4s due to the P4 local APIC force-enable change in 2.5.74, This patch reverts the 2.5.74 patch, so if the BIOS disables the local APIC on a P4, we don't enable it by default any more. The rescue the situation for those P4 systems where the local APIC _can_ be enabled safely, I've added two kernel parameters that can be used to override broken BIOSen: - "nolapic" prevents the kernel from enabling or using the local APIC. This is stronger than listing a machine in the DMI scan blacklist, since it also works for machines that boot with the local APIC already enabled. - "lapic" tells the kernel to force-enable the P4 local APIC if the BIOS disabled it. I haven't changed the logic for P6/K7 family processors, so we still force-enable those unless "nolapic" was passed to the kernel. The patch also includes a cleanup: the dont_use_local_apic_timer flag variable is not set any more since 2.5.74, so it's removed.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Eric Valette <eric.valette@free.fr> The following patch integrated in 2.5.74, <http://lists.insecure.org/lists/linux-kernel/2003/Jun/5840.html> really enables the APIC even if BIOS disabled it. Unfortunately, enabling APIC really does not seem to work on this ASUS laptop and ACPI (which is mandatory) crash the kernel in ACPI code at boot time while "Executing all Devices _STA and_INIT methods" Unless someones find a bug in ACPI code related to APIC management, It is safer to add this machine in the DMI black list (along with DELL, IBM, ...). So, as suggested by the author of the problematic change, I added and entry in the DMI black list. But my guess is that most laptop will soon be present in this list....
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Ernie Petrides <petrides@redhat.com> (I can't get anyone to review this, but I'm sure there's a bug in there, and Ernie's patch has been in -mm for some time). There is a long-standing locking hole in the kernel's handling of the signals related to stopping and resuming processes. When a process handles SIGSTOP, SIGTSTP, SIGTTIN, or SIGTTOU, the "sighand" lock is held while the signal is dequeued and appropriate masks are updated. But the "sighand" lock is dropped in several cases before the task's state is changed to TASK_STOPPED (or before a group-stop is initiated). If a process running on another cpu posts a SIGCONT or SIGKILL just after the "victim" process releases the lock but before its state is set to TASK_STOPPED, the corresponding wakeup will be lost and the victim will remain stopped despite the successive SIGCONT or SIGKILL. In this case, a repeated posting of SIGCONT or SIGKILL will have no effect, since the original one is already pending (and so causes a repeated posting to be discarded). The occurrence of a SIGSTOP/SIGKILL race where the victim has blocked all other signals will result in an unkillable process. Although a fabricated test program can reproduce a SIGSTOP/SIGCONT race hang in less than a minute (on a 2-cpu Dell Precision 450), the scenario that has been most frequently encountered is a hang during reboot or shutdown. This occurs because /sbin/killall5 brackets the scanning of /proc/* and associated signal posting to (most) of the processes still running with kill(-1, SIGSTOP) and kill(-1, SIGCONT) calls to temporarily freeze every process except for "init". Occasionally, its parent (running the /etc/rc6.d/S01reboot shell script) gets stuck in TASK_STOPPED state with pending SIGCONT and SIGCLD signals, but with no other process left to wake it up. In order to fix the race condition, the locking in do_signal_stop() and get_signal_to_deliver() needed reworking to close the hole. Due to lock ordering issues between the "sighand" lock and tasklist_lock, there are two cases where the former lock needs to be released and then reacquired, thus allowing a tiny hole for a SIGCONT/SIGKILL to be posted. These two cases are resolved by rechecking for a pending SIGCONT/SIGKILL after the locks are (re)acquired in the proper order. Anyone wanting a copy of the test program may e-mail me off-list.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Andi Kleen <ak@suse.de> POSIX says si_band in siginfo_t must be long. glibc uses this, except for Alpha. This type must be correct on little endian machines, otherwise Konqueror does not get any events from dnotity for created/deleted files. Currenly asm-generic/siginfo.h uses int, which is wrong. This patch adds a new macro __ARCH_SI_BAND_T which is int for alpha and long for everybody else. This makes the type on x86-64 come out correctly
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- 18 Aug, 2003 32 commits
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bk://kernel.bkbits.net/jgarzik/net-drivers-2.6Linus Torvalds authored
into home.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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Alan Cox authored
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Jeff Garzik authored
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Simon Kelley authored
1) Add another card to the PCMCIA card database. 2) Fix a bug in wireless extensions. 3) Remove extra code for compilation without the firmware loader 4) force-enable CRC32 and FW_LOADER in Kconfig.
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Jeff Garzik authored
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Adam Kropelin authored
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Karol Kozimor authored
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Matthew Natalier authored
It wants big endian vlan tags. IEEE, or just weird?
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Javier Achirica authored
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bk://kernel.bkbits.net/jgarzik/misc-2.6Linus Torvalds authored
into home.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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Jeff Garzik authored
on NCAPINTS value found in include/asm-i386/cpufeature.h.
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Rob Landley authored
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Jeff Garzik authored
into redhat.com:/garz/repo/misc-2.6
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Linus Torvalds authored
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Andrew Morton authored
From: William Lee Irwin III <wli@holomorphy.com> Contributions from: Jan Dittmer <jdittmer@sfhq.hn.org> Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de> "Bryan O'Sullivan" <bos@serpentine.com> "David S. Miller" <davem@redhat.com> Badari Pulavarty <pbadari@us.ibm.com> "Martin J. Bligh" <mbligh@aracnet.com> Zwane Mwaikambo <zwane@linuxpower.ca> It has ben tested on x86, sparc64, x86_64, ia64 (I think), ppc and ppc64. cpumask_t enables systems with NR_CPUS > BITS_PER_LONG to utilize all their cpus by creating an abstract data type dedicated to representing cpu bitmasks, similar to fd sets from userspace, and sweeping the appropriate code to update callers to the access API. The fd set-like structure is according to Linus' own suggestion; the macro calling convention to ambiguate representations with minimal code impact is my own invention. Specifically, a new set of inline functions for manipulating arbitrary-width bitmaps is introduced with a relatively simple implementation, in tandem with a new data type representing bitmaps of width NR_CPUS, cpumask_t, whose accessor functions are defined in terms of the bitmap manipulation inlines. This bitmap ADT found an additional use in i386 arch code handling sparse physical APIC ID's, which was convenient to use in this case as the accounting structure was required to be wider to accommodate the physids consumed by larger numbers of cpus. For the sake of simplicity and low code impact, these cpu bitmasks are passed primarily by value; however, an additional set of accessors along with an auxiliary data type with const call-by-reference semantics is provided to address performance concerns raised in connection with very large systems, such as SGI's larger models, where copying and call-by-value overhead would be prohibitive. Few (if any) users of the call-by-reference API are immediately introduced. Also, in order to avoid calling convention overhead on architectures where structures are required to be passed by value, NR_CPUS <= BITS_PER_LONG is special-cased so that cpumask_t falls back to an unsigned long and the accessors perform the usual bit twiddling on unsigned longs as opposed to arrays thereof. Audits were done with the structure overhead in-place, restoring this special-casing only afterward so as to ensure a more complete API conversion while undergoing the majority of its end-user exposure in -mm. More -mm's were shipped after its restoration to be sure that was tested, too. The immediate users of this functionality are Sun sparc64 systems, SGI mips64 and ia64 systems, and IBM ia32, ppc64, and s390 systems. Of these, only the ppc64 machines needing the functionality have yet to be released; all others have had systems requiring it for full functionality for at least 6 months, and in some cases, since the initial Linux port to the affected architecture.
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David S. Miller authored
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David S. Miller authored
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Hollis Blanchard authored
Kernul proggrammers cant spel.
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Albert Cahalan authored
This cleans up ioport.c to use BITS_PER_LONG, sizeof, and so on. This makes it easier to spot the differences that matter, and thus easier to find bugs.
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Linus Torvalds authored
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Linus Torvalds authored
will stand up and un-break them.
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Linus Torvalds authored
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Linus Torvalds authored
It's still broken, but now the silly warnings no longer hide the _real_ problems in this file.
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bk://linux-isdn.bkbits.net/linux-2.5.makeLinus Torvalds authored
into home.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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Maciej Soltysiak authored
Here is a batch of C99 initialisers for sound/oss.
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Linus Torvalds authored
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Linus Torvalds authored
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Linus Torvalds authored
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Linus Torvalds authored
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Linus Torvalds authored
This might bring the driver to a state where people who have hardware can try to fix the locking problems.
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Linus Torvalds authored
This gets it potentially closer to working, if somebody could just test it...
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Linus Torvalds authored
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